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Will Columbia's law-school dean learn the law of free speech? | Israel National News

Will Columbia's law-school dean learn the law of free speech? | Israel National News
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Colorado , United-states , Vietnam , Republic-of , Washington , Nathan-lewinis , David-schizer , Minouche-shafik , Elise-stefanik , Wilmer-cutler , House-committee , Supreme-court

Will Columbia's law-school dean learn the law of free speech? | JNS

David Schizer’s introductory statement at a House hearing was appalling, deserving a failing grade in his school’s constitutional law course.

Colorado , United-states , Vietnam , Republic-of , Washington , David-schizer , Elise-stefanik , Wilmer-cutler , Minouche-shafik , Minorities-in-supreme-court-litigation , Lloyd-corp , Columbia-law-school

Deadline White House

prosecuted after they leave office. the special council is saying this matters a lot because accountability has to stand for something. just as the president needs to execute his correspondents, there has to be a rule of law. both sides are wrapping themselves in the magnitude of this case, which you just don't see that much in supreme court litigation. there's no question this case is serious, but i think both sides are acknowledging the really tremendous impact that it will have on our democracy going forward. >> my instinctive response that is how could you not talk about the stakes here, how could you not broaden out. given that i'm not attorney, if most lit gants come before the supreme court and try to narrow the objective of the case, i wonder from a strategic vantage point that the is special counsel and trump's team are deciding to run in out. >> attorneys want to win. and usually, exactly as tim says, you serve up the narrowest

President , Something , Lot , Office-of-legal-counsel , Accountability , Sides , Council , Correspondents , Rule-of-law , Thement-immunity-case , Democracy , Impact

Subverting the Court

Subverting the Court
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United-states , China , American , John-locke , Jeffreyl-fisher , Supreme-court , Packing-the-court , Stanford-law-school , Supreme-court-litigation-clinic , Supreme-court-litigation ,

Donald Ayer

Donald Ayer (@DonaldAyer6) is a retired partner in the Washington D.C. office of Jones Day. He has argued 19 times in the U.S. Supreme Court, more than 70 cases in the intermediate appellate courts, and has also been lead counsel in approximately 20 trials, most before juries. He received an A.B., with Great Distinction, from Stanford in 1971, an M.A. in American History from Harvard in 1973, and a J.D. from Harvard in 1975, where he was Articles Editor of the Law Review. He clerked for Judge Malcolm R. Wilkey of the D.C. Circuit, and for Justice William H. Rehnquist. Professor Ayer has served since 2006 as an adjunct professor teaching a course in Supreme Court Litigation at Georgetown Law School. He is presently a member of the Council of the American Law Institute, and Chair of the Publications Committee of the Supreme Court Historical Society. He has served previously as President of the American Academy of Appellate Lawyers and of the Edward Coke Appellate Inn of Court. Before entering private practice in 1990, Professor Ayer spent ten years in the United States Department of Justice, including two Presidential appointments. He worked in California first as an Assistant U.S. Attorney, and from 1981-1986 as United States Attorney in Sacramento. In 1986 he moved to Washington as Principal Deputy Solicitor General under Solicitor General Charles Fried, during the final three years of the Reagan Administration. In 1989, he was appointed by President George H.W. Bush and served as Deputy Attorney General during 1989-1990. Since his retirement from Jones Day in 2018, Professor Ayer has written extensively on rule of law issues, including many articles addressing the abuses of our legal system perpetrated by the Trump administration. He is also on LinkedIn.

Washington , United-states , California , Stanford , American , Georgehw-bush , Donald-ayer , Donald-ayer-donaldayer , Charles-fried , Malcolmr-wilkey , Justice-williamh-rehnquist , Linkedin

Opinion | The Supreme Court's Conservatives Even Control Which Cases the Justice

In addition to deciding cases, those justices also have the votes to decide which cases the court hears, setting the agenda in the process.

Louisiana , United-states , Mississippi , Stanford , White-house , District-of-columbia , Justice-sotomayor , David-brown , Sonia-sotomayor , Elena-kagan , Jeffreyl-fisher , Justice-ketanji-brown-jackson